The Best Place To Retire On The Dorset Coast

The Best Place To Retire On The Dorset Coast2019-04-152019-04-15https://stonehengepensioner.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/passero-logo-tagline-931x340.jpgStonehenge Pensionerhttps://stonehengepensioner.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/image-2019-04-12-1.jpg200px200px

I have had discussions with many people about the best place to retire on the Dorset coast. Various reasons inform this decision, not least the cost of property. The east of the county is expensive but less so as you travel further west. Why do prices vary so much? Perhaps this relates to the time it takes to get to hospital if you have a serious illness.

Health Services

Every time Ann and I head west in Dorset, ambulances speed past in emergency mode. Rightly or wrongly, I visualise people in trauma heading for hospitals that are ever further away. When last in Lyme Regis, it struck me that hospital, a major hospital, was a long way off. I put the question to Google and it suggested that it was 21 minutes – to Bridport Community Hospital. This is little bigger than Highcliffe Medical Centre! Google understood the golden hour, within which you must receive treatment if suffering serious illness. It did not suggest which major hospital would be used from Lyme Regis. For certain, it would be much longer than we in the east can reach Bournemouth Hospital.

The Environment

Those that argue for retirement in places like Lyme Regis talk of its leisure opportunities, principally walking or cycling. That does not hold water. Every route out of that town is uphill, steeply uphill. Worse, the access to the coast heading east, which has slumped, is closed. Okay, Christchurch may not have that dramatic coast, but what it has is relatively flat, well paved and with access for the disabled.

Distance to London

Is it the distance from London that influences property prices? Christchurch is two hours from London by train. Lyme Regis requires a drive to Axminster and then three hours by train.

Prehistory

It seems weird to ask ‘My Pagan Ancestor Zuri‘ what she thinks but it is strangely valid. The traders bringing red sandstone and Kimmeridge shale from the Jurassic coast told her that it was a remote, wild place; that the rocks in the sea and the cliffs made it dangerous to go ashore. Unlike Christchurch, it was not an area where people could thrive, in 2200 BC at least. A sheltered harbour, navigable rivers and water meadows were essential for a good life. That’s why Zuri’s tribe built Stonehenge on the River Avon.

The Best Place to Retire on the Dorset Coast

After 45 years in bereavement services, I retired in 2006. Subsequently, I wrote 'A Guide to Natural Burial' in 2010 and 'R.I.P. Off! or: The British Way of Death' in 2012'. I moved to Christchurch, Dorset in 2012 to join the oldest population in the UK. My book 'My Pagan Ancestor Zuri - A Parallel Journey: Christchurch to Stonehenge' is due to be published in July 2019. My vision is to show the relevance of history, in this case pre-history, in the way we live today and in the future, through disseminating knowledge and understanding. The book highlights how a small area of Dorset and Wiltshire played a significant role in the creation of Stonehenge and the first common culture or civilisation in Britain, then fell into agrarian decline only to re-emerge as a retirement hotspot; Avonlands became picturesque for the affluent pensioner.